Combination of Heparin Binding Peptide and Heparin Cell Surface

Jan 17, 2018 - †The George W. Woodruff School of Mechanical Engineering and ∥Parker H. Petit Institute for Bioengineering and Bioscience, Georgia ...
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Combination of heparin binding peptide and heparin cell surface coatings for mesenchymal stem cell spheroid assembly Jennifer Lei, William L Murphy, and Johnna S. Temenoff Bioconjugate Chem., Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/acs.bioconjchem.7b00757 • Publication Date (Web): 17 Jan 2018 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on January 18, 2018

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Bioconjugate Chemistry

Combination of heparin binding peptide and heparin cell surface coatings for mesenchymal stem cell spheroid assembly Jennifer Lei†¥, William L. Murphy‡#, Johnna S. Temenoff§¥* †The George W. Woodruff School of Mechanical Engineering, Georgia Tech, Georgia 30332, United States ‡Department of Biomedical Engineering, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Wisconsin 53706, United States #Department of Orthopedics and Rehabilitation, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Wisconsin 53705, United States §Coulter Department of Biomedical Engineering, Georgia Tech/Emory University, Georgia 30332, United States ¥Parker H. Petit Institute for Bioengineering and Bioscience, Georgia Tech, Georgia 30332, United States *to whom correspondence should be addressed: [email protected]

Abstract Microtissues containing multiple cell types have been used in both in vitro models and in vivo tissue repair applications. However, to improve through-put, there is a need to develop a platform that supports self-assembly of a large number of 3D microtissues containing multiple cell types in a dynamic suspension system. Thus, the objective of this study was to exploit the binding interaction between the negatively charged glycosaminoglycan, heparin, and a known heparin binding peptide to establish a method that promotes assembly of mesenchymal stem cell (MSC) spheroids into larger aggregates. We characterized heparin binding peptide (HEPpep) and heparin coatings on cell surfaces and determined the specificity of these coatings in promoting assembly of MSC spheroids in dynamic culture. Overall, combining spheroids with both coatings promoted up to 70±11% of spheroids to assemble in to multi-aggregate structures, as compared to only 10±4% assembly when cells having the heparin coating were cultured with cells coated with a scrambled peptide. These results suggest that this self-assembly method represents an

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exciting approach that may be applicable for a wide range of applications in which cell aggregation is desired. Table of Contents Figure

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Introduction Microtissues formed from smaller tissue constructs or cells have been used in both in vitro models and in vivo tissue repair applications.1,2 Microtissue models can recapitulate tumor or tissue microenvironments for drug screening and have been typically executed in cellular arrays or microfluidic devices that provide a means to culture cells in either two-dimensions or three-dimensions (3D).2-5 For tissue repair purposes, assembled 3D microtissues aim to recapitulate multiple aspects of complex physiological microenvironments for efficient integration, both functionally and morphologically, with the defect tissue.6-8 To create microtissues with multiple cell types, current methods include encapsulation in hydrogels, scaffold-free technologies, and microfluidic devices. Hydrogel encapsulation has been used to control organization of cell populations by encapsulating different cell types into separate sections or seeding all cell types in a mixed population in one single hydrogel.9-11 Scaffold-free technologies utilize centrifugation or gravity to force cells into an aggregate form. In this approach, multiple cell types are typically mixed together and cultured together in one aggregate.12,13 Lastly, microfluidic systems have been used to form high throughput arrays of small microtissues. Spatial organization of different cell types is typically achieved by introducing different cell types into the small specialized devices sequentially to allow for each cell type to interact and bind with each other.14-17 While these methods have all shown have the ability to produce multicellular microtissues, there are disadvantages to each of these approaches. In encapsulation and scaffoldfree technologies, formation is typically performed at a single microtissue scale, in which one hydrogel or one aggregate is produced at a time.11,18 While microfluidic devices have the ability to produce multiple microtissues simultaneously,2,3,15 the number formed is limited by the

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number of devices that need to be used. Another shortcoming is that formation of microtissues with multiple cell types requiring physical placement of different populations adjacent to each other often require external biomaterials, such as hydrogels or microparticles, or specialized devices, such as microfluidic devices, to support assembly.10,19 Finally, previous methods have typically developed microtissues under static conditions, as opposed to dynamic culture, that can provide mixing and diffusion of nutrients and oxygen to promote higher viability of the cells within the microtissue construct.8 Given the limitations of current microtissue assembly technologies, the long-term goal of this work is to develop a platform that supports simultaneous self-assembly of a large number of 3D microtissues containing multiple cell types in a dynamic suspension system. As a step toward this goal, MSC spheroids were chosen as the model cell type in these studies because these cells have been extensively used in numerous microtissue applications, including cartilage, hepatic, vascularized tissues and bone marrow niches.8,20-23 To achieve self-assembly, we utilized a cell coating that has been previously developed in our laboratory that uses layer-by-layer technology using biotin, and avidin to graft a biotinylated glycosaminoglycan (GAG), heparin, onto cell surfaces prior to formation of small spheroids.24 Heparin (Hep) is a negatively charged naturally derived polysaccharide that is known to interact with growth factors such as fibroblast growth factor-2 (FGF-2).25,26 Specific heparin binding sites have been identified on FGF-2, and one of these sequences has been synthesized into a short sequence known as a heparin binding peptide (HEPpep). This peptide has been previously used as part of a self-assembled monolayer that is able to specifically sequester heparin from culture media.27,28 Thus, the objective of this study was to investigate the use of HEPpep and heparin coatings on assembly of small aggregates of MSCs (MSC spheroids) into larger microtissues in a

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Bioconjugate Chemistry

dynamic 3D culture system (see Figure 1). We examined the utility of these coatings in promoting assembly of MSC spheroids in dynamic, rotary culture and determined the relative specificity of this interaction by comparing cellular assembly between HEPpep/heparin coatings vs. assembly with the use of either a scrambled peptide coating (Scramble) or a desulfated heparin coating (Hep-). In particular, it was hypothesized that the interaction between HEPpep and heparin would result in greater cellular assembly compared to interactions involving the scrambled peptide (same overall net charge and amino acid composition, but different sequence) 27

, or the desulfated heparin coating (less overall negative charge 29.

Results and Discussion In preliminary studies, confocal imaging (Figure 2) revealed that, by using a layer-bylayer coating procedure (see schematic in Figure 1), biotinylated HEPpep peptide and biotinylated natively sulfated heparin (Hep) were grafted on cell surfaces and did not disturb spheroid formation. Biotinylated fully desulfated heparin (Hep-) can also be grafted onto cell surfaces of spheroids and has been visualized for up to 14 days.30

Figure 1. Schematic of layer-by-layer coating procedure, spheroid formation, and spheroid assembly. At day 1 and day 3 after coating, both fluorescently tagged HEPpep and Hep were visualized in red on cell surfaces throughout the entire spheroid (Figure 2A-B, D-E). 5 ACS Paragon Plus Environment

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Additionally, LIVE/DEAD staining revealed that after 3 days, coated cells in spheroids remained viable (Figure 2C-F). While other systems have grafted the HEPpep sequence to 2D surfaces,27 this is the first reported example of grafting this peptide sequence onto cell surfaces.

Figure 2. HEPpep and Hep coating remains on cell surfaces for up to 3 days and does not negatively affect cell viability. Confocal images of HEPpep coating (greyscale) at (A) day 1 and (B) day 3. Hep coating (red) at (C) day 1, and (D) day 3. LIVE/DEAD of staining HEPpep coated (E) and Hep coated spheroids (F) spheroids at day 3. Scale bar = 100µm, n = 100 spheroids. For the cellular aggregation studies, assembly of spheroids with a HEPpep coating can occur in two forms: culture in environments containing soluble GAGs or culture with Hep coated spheroids (see Figure 1). To quantify the specificity of the HEPpep coating and its effects on spheroid assembly, coated spheroids were cultured in media containing soluble GAG and the diameter of all spheroids in each population was measured. After 24 hours, none of the control populations (noncoated cultured in the presence of soluble GAG and coated spheroids cultured by themselves) exhibit spheroid assembly and the average diameter of each population was not significantly different from each other (Figure S1). Measurements from these control populations 6 ACS Paragon Plus Environment

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Bioconjugate Chemistry

were used to establish a cut-off diameter that were utilized in the analysis of spheroid assembly (see Methods section and Figure S1),

Figure 3. HEPpep-coated spheroids increased in diameter when cultured for 24 hours in serumfree media containing soluble Hep or Hep-. Phase image (top) and histogram of aggregate diameters (bottom) of HEPpep-coated aggregates cultured in serum-free media containing (A) 5mg/mL heparin (B) 5mg/mL desulfated heparin or (C) basal conditions. Phase image (above) and histogram of aggregate diameters (below) of Scramble-coated aggregates cultured in serumfree media containing (D) 5mg/mL heparin, (E) 5mg/mL desulfated heparin, or (F) basal conditions. Scale bar = 100µm, n = ~1500 spheroids in total, red line indicates cutoff size. & indicates significantly different from measurements above the cutoff size, p